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She found out on Facebook, though????

Woman Finds Out She Was Abducted By Father On Facebook

Facebook can bring people together and tear people apart.

According to Yahoo Shine:

Angela Palmer has spent most of her life believing that her own mother abandoned her as a baby. Now, at 44, she’s learned the truth and has spoken with her mom for the first time in decades. And while Palmer is thrilled, her quest isn’t over yet. Now she has to raise funds to bring the mother she never knew from Croatia to the United States.

Palmer, a medical health project services coordinator, is seeking the money through the website Fundly, where, as of Tuesday, she had raised more than $1,200 of the $4,000 she needs for two round-trip plane tickets for her mother and her husband.

The new beginning was triggered by, of all things, a Facebook friend request. “I was at work the week before Thanksgiving, when I received a friend request from a woman named Helga Simeckie in Croatia,” Palmer, from Oceanside, California, tells Yahoo Shine. “I didn’t think much of it because I get random requests all the time, until she sent me a message written in German asking when I was born.” Palmer, who was born and raised in Germany, speaks the language fluently and wrote back, asking who the woman was.

“She said she was my mother. I was shocked because my mother had abandoned me when I was a baby,” says Palmer. She had been raised by her father, who had always told her that after her mother gained custody following their divorce, she dropped the young girl off at a German orphanage when she was less than a year old. “Later, my father took me in, and although he was an alcoholic and mentally and physically abusive, he was the only parent I knew,” Palmer says.

But Simeckie tells a different story. After emailing Palmer the evidence she had — her birth certificate and old family photos — she told Palmer that she hadn’t actually abandoned her and that Palmer’s father actually kidnapped her. “She said my father was wanted in Germany for kidnapping and domestic violence, but he avoided the police by constantly moving us to new cities,” she says.

It all began to make sense to Palmer, whose father had said he was a traveling salesman and had to keep moving their small family in order to find work. In fact, they moved 12 times before Palmer turned 18. “Apparently, my paternal grandfather had kept my mother informed of my whereabouts during the years she was in contact with my father, but each time he received a court summons, we moved again,” she says. “I still don’t understand how he managed to escape the law so many times.”

In late November, the mother-daughter duo spoke for the first time over Skype with the help of local news affiliate San Diego6 and have emailed each other every day since then. “I have an amazing gift that I didn’t have last year and I hope that my story will encourage others to keep looking for lost family members,” says Palmer. “My story could happen to anyone.”

What’s done in the dark will always come to light.

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